Pages

Labels

23 May, 2011

How to make a very cheap VHF receiver

What is the cheapest receiver you can make for VHF? Here is a candidate where all you need to do to modify a small FM headphone receiver is to desolder one end of two capacitors, and connect a short cable with an antenna connector.

One 22 pF capacitor lifted on the right-hand side near the headphone

connector for connection to the external antenna, and another one lifted on

the left-hand side, above the volume control for increasing the tuning range

(The receiver IC is on the foil side of the board).

Find a simple pocket-size headphone FM receiver with tuning wheel (not push-button search). I found mine at a flea market for 10 NOK (less than 1 £) and it is designated "HS-822, UK design," and runs from two 1.5 V AAA batteries. See picture of complete radio below.

Open it and check the FM receiver chip. Mine has KA22429 which is equivalent to a TDA7021. It is a 16-pin surface mount device with an FM receiver with a 76 kHz intermediate frequency. Although the TDA7021 is specified for 1.5-110 MHz, don't let that scare you.

The oscillator tuned circuit from pin 5 to Vcc (pin 4) consists of 56 nH in parallel with a fixed 22 pF capacitor + a tuning capacitor. Unsolder and lift the hot end of the 22 pF capacitor (the end connected to pin 5).

This receiver uses the headphone cable as the antenna. There is a coupling capacitor from the RF input on pin 12 which is connected to the headphone socket. Unsolder and lift the headphone side of this capacitor, and connect the RF input via the capacitor to a BNC antenna connector. Connect the BNC ground to ground (pin 3) or Vcc (pin 4), whatever is more convenient

Performance:

The tuning range was 88-108 MHz. Now it is approximately 112-163 MHz. Mine receives airport communications (AM), amateur repeaters in the 2m band (144-146 MHz), and some public service transmissions in the 150-160 MHz range. If I connect my TV cable, channel S9 (sound 161.25 MHz) will be received at a setting of 108 MHz.

It receives wideband FM, as well as AM and narrowband FM with somewhat reduced output level.

Don't except miracles in terms of signal handling. If there are two active repeaters in the 2m band, only the strongest will be received.

Compared to wideband FM, narrowband FM/AM requires more accurate tuning, and the receiver is somewhat sensitive to the placement of your hands.

I have not tried this with other chips, such as the SC1088 = TDA7088, or the TDA7000. Both the Philips chips are specified for 1.5-110 MHz, but who knows how high in frequency they will cover? I would be interested to hear from others who try to convert other single-chip FM receivers.

This article was originally published in SPRAT - the journal of the G-QRP Club - Winter 2004. I wrote in Sprat that I would be interested in hearing from others who try to convert other single-chip FM receivers. Ha-Jo, DJ1ZB then wrote and said that he had been successful in using the TDA7000 for a VHF receiver. Also Pete G1INF wrote about his experience in using the TDA7088 for a 40 m direct conversion receiver, so HF operation is also possible. I have now made such a receiver myself also with success. More details of this kind of conversion can be found on Hans Summers page about conversion of a Poundshop FM receiver to 40 meters, where I also contributed a small amount.

This blog post was taken from the SPRAT article in order to enable discussions relating to the circuit. The first comments are all based on emails I have received over the years with questions and comments, therefore you will see me as the author of these comments.

Added 16 April 2012:
Here's a picture of the "HS-822 FM headphone receiver" giving an impression of how it looks. The BNC connector to the lower right is the new antenna connector.

About Me

Welcome to the web site of Sverre Holm, an electronics tinkerer and all around geek with a recent interest in the Arduino. I live in Asker, which is just south of Oslo, and where I work at the University of Oslo.

As radio amateur LA3ZA, I am fascinated by the magic of Morse code, but I wish I were better at it. In the picture above I am in a CW pile-up as TK/LA3ZA from Corsica with an Elecraft K2, my first love in rigs.

I like chasing far-away stations and just recently qualified for an 8 band DXCC with ≥100 confirmed countries per band from 80 to 10m. Most confirmations are with Morse on the highly recommended Logbook of the World. My station is described on QRZ.com.